The Birkin isn't sold. It's earned. That's been Hermès ' position for decades, and it's exactly what's now being challenged in court. A class action lawsuit is forcing one of fashion's most powerful houses to defend something the luxury industry has long treated as strategy: the art of saying no.
Here's what the case means for how luxury brands sell, who they sell to, and whether exclusivity has a legal price tag. The Core Issue: Is Hermès Forcing Sales? At the heart of this legal battle is a practice known as
"tying." In simple terms, tying is when a seller forces a buyer to purchase one product (the "tied" product) in order to get another, more desirable product (the "tying" product).
The lawsuit claims Hermès is doing exactly this: making customers buy other, less sought after items before they can even be considered for a Birkin bag.
The lawsuit, initially filed on March 19, 2024 , in a California federal court , was brought by two customers , Tina Cavalleri and Mark Glinoga , with a third, Mengyao Yang , later joining. They accuse Hermès International and its U.S.
branch of violating antitrust law and rules designed to promote fair competition and prevent monopolies. Specifically, they cite the federal Sherman Act and California's Cartwright Act…
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